I would argue that the ontological existence of gratuitous, pointless, unnecessary evil makes much more sense of Christian theology and human experience than its nonexistence does.
This is Ragozine’s Arminian take on the problem of evil.
But, ironically, an atheist would argue that the ontological existence of
gratuitous, pointless, unnecessary evil makes much more sense if a world
without God. That the existence of gratuitous, pointless, unnecessary evil is
just what we’d expect if there is no God. Suffering is random because there is
no cosmic purpose or cosmic justice. It’s just your bad luck if you happen to
find yourself in the wrong place at the wrong time.
How would Ragozine empirically distinguish his
interpretation of events from the atheist?
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